California Cookbook

Tortellini in brodo

Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times

By S. Irene Virbila | Dec. 26, 2015

Bologna where Steve Samson's mother, Anna, grew up, tortellini is the dish of celebration, part of the meal at every special occasion — birthdays, weddings, even New Year's Eve. So when the chef/owner of Sotto and his entire family went ...
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Step 1In a large stock pot, cover the bones with the cold water. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to a simmer, skimming any scum from the surface of the broth. Add the onions, celery, carrots, parsley stems and Parmigiano rinds and gently simmer, loosely covered, for 2 hours (while the broth is simmering, prepare the pasta and filling). Strain, discarding the solids and any fat that has risen to the top. Season the broth with 1 teaspoon salt, or to taste. Cool, then refrigerate until ready to prepare the final dish.

Pasta

4 cups (500 g) unbleached all-purpose flour

Pinch salt

5 eggs

Water

Step 1In a very large bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. Make a well in the center of the flour and add the eggs. Working with your hands, slowly incorporate the flour with the eggs to form a dough. If the mixture feels a little dry, add water, a tablespoon at a time, just until the flour is evenly incorporated. The dough will be very firm (it will relax and soften as it rests in the refrigerator). Knead the dough a minute or two to smooth out some of the roughness, then cover tightly in plastic. Refrigerate the dough at least 1 to 2 hours, up to 1 day.

Filling

6 ounces pork loin, cut in 1-inch cubes

6 ounces chicken breast, cut in 1-inch cubes

2 tablespoons butter

1/4 cup dry white wine

4 ounces chopped prosciutto

2 ounces chopped mortadella

6 ounces grated Parmigiano Reggiano

2 egg yolks

1 tablespoon ricotta

Salt, pepper, grated nutmeg to taste

Step 1In a large sauté pan, brown the pork and chicken with the butter over medium heat until cooked through. Add the white wine, scraping any flavoring from the bottom of the pan, then remove from heat and set aside to cool. Place the cooled meat in a food processor with the prosciutto, mortadella, Parmigiano Reggiano, egg yolks and ricotta. Season with 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon pepper and a pinch of nutmeg, or to taste. Pulse the mixture until the meat is ground and the filling ingredients are fully combined.

Tortellini in brodo

Prepared pasta

Prepared filling

Prepared broth

Grated Parmigiano Reggiano, for serving

Step 1Prepare the tortellini: Roll the pasta out as thinly as possible. Cut the pasta into roughly 1-inch squares. Place a small ball (about 1/4 teaspoon) of filling on the pasta, then fold the pasta over to form a triangle, sealing the edges (if the edges won't stick, wet them with a little water). Bring the outer ends of the triangle together to form the tortellini shape, pressing the ends together to seal. Repeat with the remaining pasta and filling. (This can easily make 400 or more tortellini depending on the size of the shaped pasta.)

Step 2Bring the broth to a boil. Add the pasta (this will need to be done in batches), and cook until the pasta is just tender, about 3 minutes.

Step 3Serve 25 to 30 tortellini in broth for each guest, sprinkling over a little more grated Parmigiano Reggiano before serving.

Bologna where Steve Samson's mother, Anna, grew up, tortellini is the dish of celebration, part of the meal at every special occasion — birthdays, weddings, even New Year's Eve. So when the chef/owner of Sotto and his entire family went back to Bologna this past summer to celebrate his parents' 50th wedding anniversary, he made sure tortellini in brodo was on the menu.

It's going to be on his New Year's Eve menu as well at his mother's house in Calabasas, where the tradition is for the whole family to get together to make tortellini. "It becomes a competition to see who can make the best," Steve Samson says. With his 3-year-old twins, his older brother's two kids and his younger brother's three — that's quite a tortellini-making team. And they're all critics, pointing out the ugliest or misshapen tortellini.

The taste memories of the food Samson had at his grandparents' house in the mountains south of Bologna inspired him to become a chef. "It's very approachable and very humble — tortellini, lasagna verde, Bolognese sauce, great tagliatelle al ragú and meats cooked over a wood fire," he says. And it's those dishes he's itching to cook at RossoBlu, a restaurant he plans to open next year in the new downtown L.A. development City Market South, where he'll be sharing a building with the Slanted Door.

Samson's first restaurant, Sotto, is southern Italian, a cuisine foreign to his mother, who often tells her son, "The food is good. But I like my food better."

Expect to see her at RossoBlu a lot, checking on the pasta.

Somehow, while they finalized plans for the restaurant, Samson and his mother made the time to show us how to prepare tortellini in brodo for New Year's Eve at home.

First, you need to make a rich broth with chicken and beef neck bones. While the broth is simmering, prepare the filling, which traditionally is made from lean pork and either rabbit or chicken with prosciutto, mortadella and Parmigiano Reggiano. To build in more flavor, Samson likes to roast or sauté the meat before putting the filling ingredients through a meat grinder or food processor.

With a stand mixer, making the fresh pasta is pretty straightforward. Once the sheet of pasta is rolled out, cut it into squares that are a little larger than 1 inch on a side. (That's incredibly small, and it may take some practice to make such minuscule tortellini. But no one's going to report you to the Bolognese authorities if you make yours a little larger.)

The other dishes on the Samson family's New Year's Eve menu are easier to make. One of them is cotechino with lentils, which represents prosperity in the new year. "Cotechino is a super-rich cooked sausage made with lean pork and a lot of pork skin, which gives it an unctuous texture," Samson explains. Usually served with potatoes, it's served on New Year's Eve with tiny green-brown lentils from Castelluccio, a town in Umbria.

The idea is to have just a couple of slices of the rich sausage with the lentils. Of course, Samson likes to make his own cotechino — but you don't. You can usually find the sausage at Guidi Marcello in Santa Monica, which also sells lentils from Castelluccio. (A good substitute is the more widely available French lentils de Puy.)

Anna Samson might also make a roasted stuffed veal or turkey breast as part of a New Year's Eve meal. Some Bolognese cooks just make extra tortellini stuffing for the occasion, but his mother likes to stuff her roasts with hard-boiled eggs (which also represent prosperity), carrots and other vegetables. When the roast is sliced, you get a pretty cross-section, Samson says.

Of course, this is a menu for any special occasion. Even a beginning cook can handle the cotechino and lentils. But those tortellini? They take time and planning — and tiny fingers, but the result is sublimely satisfying. The great thing is you don't have to do it on your own: Call in the family troops and make tortellini. Who knows? It might become a New Year's tradition.